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tv   Hannity  FOX News  July 25, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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i got a shell company in delaware. why are you the account number n ? >> that's all for tonight. dve yor the show. i didn't learn how to dvr until a few weeks ago. there's a buttoni didn. the remote. you just hit dvr. t how, can't figure ou have your wife do it. always remember, i'm waters. and this is my world. and welcome to hannity. and tonight, for the full hour, a town hall with democrat running for president. and coming up, robert f kennedy jr will join us right here. >> we got a rowdy new york city crowd. thanks for cominus.g here. comin no topic is off table. opic i no question is off limits,s that's for sure. now we, definitely don't agreeet on everything, but that's that's not my role here tonighhi tt. . >> we're not going to shut down
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robert f jr. f. kenn >> he's running for president. and i knowin there are other people in the media that have said they want to deplatform him and nohet even listen to hi. i actually believe in freedom and freedom of speec.h, the freedom of the american people to hear things that e with andisagre ascertain and determine for themselves whether they agree de if it's a mean issue. >> my advice is go to your doctor. ask your docto or with them, somebody that knows your medical history or preexisting conditions or co-morbidities. you might have medicines, you might be taken. so that's going to be up to you, the audience, and to put faith and trust and hope in all of you. like many of his fellow democrats and others in the media mob, make no mistake, they are right now furious with rfk jr. they seem to loathe his stance on medical freedom and privacy.n they are angry he does not toe the partthy on the war in ukraie and former president donaldp, trump. they can't seem to stand that robert kennedy jr is a free thinke oberr, classic liberal
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principles. tod today, well today's democratic party is about compliance. it's abouts democrarty is alongt groupthink. stepping out of line, about coud be unacceptable for many, especially for a quote kennedy a . and tonight, for some reason, many democrats, they have circled the wagonsnedy. around n 88-year-old cognitively impaired , frankly, morallyy im bankrupt career politician who has been credibly accused of plagiarism, bribery, public corruption from an perspective, a perspective i think even the democratic myrty can do a lot better. and my next guest agrees. that's why he is challenginggueg joe biden for the democratic nomination. new york city. let's chals give a warm welcome democratic candidate for president f kennedy jr.
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and former nbc. >> how are you?e yo very well. they're all here to see me. they didn't know i'm here. >> you have a lot of fans here . i guess my first question is an obvious one, but maybeu have a,e we'll learn something. le sitting u.s.ing president in your party. you have to have good reasonyour to do so. >> tell us what it is. well, you know, i saw first of all, thank you for having me. >> and thank you, everybody, for showin>>ing. i saw i saw it all yesterday afternoon that said that in 1985, 85% of americans were% proud to bofe american, 85% americans between 18 and
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30 years old. >> and a poll taken last week o of people that same age of americans say that only 42% are proud to be american. i want my children to grow up as proud of this country as i t was. and, you knohis country asw. i grew up at a time we believe, with really good reason, that this country was the greatest country in historycountry and r are moral authority around the world, thae t we were in. and there was plenty of evidence for that. the world wantedthere wa our leadership. they knew the difference between leadership and bullying. bu our leadet people all over td look to the united states of america for leadership. >> when my uncle was president, he lived up to that to that role. >> and there is now more statues and more and more boulevards named after him, more avenue there's more universities in africa and asia and latin america than
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thy president. and it offends the you know,cusn because he didn't focus on shooting people and on sending he never sent combat veteran abroad or combat soldier. ad ted did i exempt 16,000 military advisers to vietnam and then awarded them all home one month before he died. and they weren't allowed to participate in combat exercises. some of them did. and instead, he's and he's got volunteers. he created the alliance for progress. he created. i did it. he wanted to put america on the side of the poor all over the world and on the side of democracy, but not at the force of a gun in this country. >> you know, i grew up at a time that's called it was called the great prosperity when we created middle class, which was the greatest economic engine ever created the american middle class. and it was that it was the foundation of our. a guy asked me, a new yorker
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editor who interviewed me a couple of weeks agditor, wo, o me, what qualifies you to be president? >> you've neveto r been in congress, you've never been a governor, you've never been in the senate. and for me, that's probably the best, because i'm not i'm not saying anything bad about people. i nk most people who are inli public office are there because they wan at to be good citizens. >> they want to be good public servants. but the system nowadays tends to go up to yo.u and, you know, it's a rotten first ed in this age and it costs $100 million. and that means that you havemoso to spend most of your time jetting between southhamptonyoub and palm beach in los angelesea and hanging out with billionaires. los angeles ey to give you money. my job over the past four years has been suing government agencies for corruption and
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and representing representing people, 10,000 families and smelter west virginia are poisoned by zinc and lead from a dupont smelting smelting facility. let's say a thousand families that now representing in columbiana county, pennsylvanian or ohio orti the norfolk south n smell and the 10,000 families i represented the dupont casei were poisoned by pfoa and pfoare and 40,000 people i represented in monsant case,o and i and fisn who i've, you know, represented as you know, my whole lifete on the hudson and other places and i end up seeing how people live and i've seen this integration of the american dream and the american experienc e. i've seen not only the social economic deprivation that now exists in this country.
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that's like what i saw in latin america when i was a kid. and i never dreamed i'd see in this country. 57% of americans can't put their hands on $1,000 if they have an emergency. how scary is that? 35% of people in this country do not make enough money to pay for basic human needs for four transportation, housing and food. so they have to make choices every day. they have to listefood.oices evh baby crying and in the room next door and you have liste won whether that baby is $30 sick or $40 or $200 before they bring them to a hospital. they have to choose between heat and food, between medicine and food have to. >> my wife and i had this discussion. my wife grew up very, very poor . >> and until she, you know, got a break, getting that job from g larry david on curb your enthusiasm, she was in i power. >> she's great on that show. it really is like that shopover
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big brother. and she said she said to me, you know, the whole time i was w i was livinghole paycheck to paycheck. >> and she said, oh, i suppose i can identify s with that. and, you know, that is not fun. it's frightening. and she said, you know, we were talking about how depressionbout and mental illness rates and suicide rates have just dramatically in this country. and she said, well, being poor makes you depressed because you're scared all the time and you think there's somethingi wrong with you. >> and, you know, this is notngr the americong a that i ask you,. i hear every day i'm listening very closely what you'reg we saying. and you're saying that we can do better. and i agree with you. do nearly, you know, over 60% of this country living paycheck to paycheck. the average american owes 54, $55,000 in debt. people are cashing in their pensions to get bareecessi necessities or they're putting or tf on credit cards thatti you know, 22 and a half percent interest rate. now, i would argue that's part of the biden economy.
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>> and, you know, the difference where we might we might separate here is whether or not you think it ought to be a government program. i think it's freo be ae economis that inspire entrepreneurs. and you have the freedom and the ability to bring goods and services to market versus, say, the government giving you your bare necessities. >> i mean, of course, you know, and nobody wantse that. t nobody wants to live on the government dole. but and it is i mean, we don't have free market capitalism in this country. >> we have corporate cronyt capitalism. we hav e we have a system of of cushy socialism for the super. >> and it is brutal, a brutal, savage, merciless capitalism for the poor. and it's all designed to strip mine the middle class in this countr savy of all of their equ,
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all of their assets, and thesa upper echelons and, you know, the covid lockdowns with ae final straw and covid lockdowns, we created straw.a billionaire, a and thiss trump and biden of 500 days of lockdowns. we created a billionaire a day. we $4 trillion from the american middle class to the super rich. >> we built the people who came into the lockdown with $30 billion, increased their wealth on average by 30%. and yo u you know, we closed 3.3 million businesses. es. >> and so in retrospect and ie give for a period of time in the early days, nobody knew what the they were dealins,g. ealing >> let's be fair. but there came i'm not going to be fair. m not goi say you don't be fair. no. in the early days, i'm talking thost january 20am and 2020. >> yeah. you know, it was early those early days. yeah, but.
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well, i'm.. let me finish the question. go ahead. but then, you know, we we got to a point, and this is where you and i will find some agreementwher. ybody in >> everybody in this country, everybody in this room were told things that turned out to be absolutely false. >> if you take the vaccine, you're never going to get covid . you take the vaccine. you're not going to infect other people. now, these are smart people. we're dealing with the virust pe and viruses all mutate and then it mutated into the delta variant and then they took away monoclonal antibody therapies, which again, wervariant e exper. bu they weret telling people who they they had, one broad sweeping general health policy. take the shot, take the boosters, take the shot shot booster. hey neve >> and meanwhile, they never considered a fact in naturaltur immunity. if you brought it up, you're beaten up, you know, publiclyimty., you we. the pressure that was brought to bear on me to tell people what they should do was unrelenting. >> and i'm not a doctor.
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>> i don't know. people's medical histories, preexisting conditions, co-morbid disease. i'm not qualified. so i didn't tell them what to do. m wh to your doctor, make an informed decision. >> take it seriously y. >> but you think the whole thing was that bad? thatole thing what? well, here's what you know. we've ha?d the w.h.o., cdc t and dhhes has all of three lettr agencies have worked have thought about pandemics for for 100 years. and they've worked very, very carefully on pandemic preparedness protocols and all of those protocols. ou n he had never locked down a population what they were doing violated, all of the orthodoxies. >> in fact the, the probably the greatest expert on how to handle pandemicths in history was assigned to an american scientist, de henderson, who's credited with obliterating the smallpox . smallpox, smallpox disappeared
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from the world by, you know, when i was a kid. he's the guy who's credited with doing it. >> and when he wonthat is the c health agencies started saying, we're going to do lockdowns. he came out of retirement and published a series of papers saying, you never do that. you're always going to cause you first of all, you cannot stop a respiratory virusa with lockdowns. you're going to actually amplify it becausereatory they d indoors, you're locking people. >> they were the worse states that didn't lock lockdown. >> right. it's the world. right. so what did you say? >> there were states that did not scientists states that lockdown less. and there are side by side studie e statess. for example, in minnesota and wisconsin, south dakota never shut down. sean: >> schools in florida opened i n august of 2020. >> yeah, and in-person learning and what all the orthodox protocols add is that you quarantine the sick,
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you protec ortt the vulnerable, and you let the population continue to. >> because when you shut down businesses, that kills people. >> you unemployment kills people and kills people. and this is what you're saying is very true. >> people call my radio show, my business was shut down. i'm a restaurant owner. i can't afford to keep my my doors open any longer.d to >> oh, 41% k of black owned businesses in this country closed down that closed and will never reopen. and i was in cleveland two weeks ago and, you know, one of the poorest neighborhoods in cleveland, whic h is scott lee, harvard.d. and it used to be a booming neighborhood. >> and, you know, i went there with dennis kucinich, who's managing my campaign was mayor, and he was like, i can't believe what i'm looking at. all of these stores are just shut down. we met with a group of black owned business owners last, surviving ones in that int
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that district. they are now shutting down because a hike in interestttingo rates that it's caused by, you know the hik, the $16 trilln bill, all the money we had to print to pay for the lockdown. >> but because we only hav>> see a one hour show and i really, really want to get to the meat of now i'm not trying to interrupt you. i promise i want to know this. then i interrun retrospect, what you have done differently? >> and whe wn at what point, in other words, would you have allowe whed the experimental w vaccine to be produced? would it be only for olderould would you have had mask mandates? would you have any school shutdowns, you know, and if you took those on, do you notos run the risk if there's more human contact, a virus we didn't know a lot about early on. we still don't really even know enough. >> and as far as i'm concerned, what would you have done differently? a lot ab , what wi would have done everyg differently. i mean, number one, the first specific for the first thing that they had it done is to
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use you know, they use the internet many, many ways that censored doctors, physicians who are trying waysy, you know, i'm using a treatment, a protocol that actually works. i'm using at work. those people are silence. we should have done the opposite. we should have use the internet. we nowhould have use t have thiy resource to link ourselves to a 15 million frontline physicians around the world and have them r report what treatments without using what was working.y we know now there were dozens and dozens of therapeutic drugs that were off the shelf, drugs that obliteratree you talking about hiv. q are drug-s ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine? but then there are many, many, many others, and then i thinky t there's a list. well, i, i think i've seen a list that here, coreya li and mcculloch i have published. i've been i've here many timesst . i've had 20 different drugs that were just devastating,
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effective against. >> but the the problem is not only did they not focus on those, but they tried to prevent the public from the pub getting access to them. and the reason for that wa s there's a little known federal law that says you cannot i an emergency use authorization to a vaccine if an existing therapeutic drug that has been approved for purpose proves to be effective against the target disease. ective >> so if they had admitted that hydroxychloroquine, which they knew from day one that worked against against covid tha couldn't be held there in the hospital. >> but after the fact came out and said that taken orally, it mitigated symptoms. d that's what i took out of that.y and there were other studies that followed. thertheri never saw one on ivern that showed it was effective. however saw on eyer, monoclonaly seemed to be a therapeutic that very well, but that was also experimental. >> wele,l, the thing is you dont
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know about those studies because the press not reporting them. >> but you go to meryl nasa's website dr. marion has that who's an expert in bioterrorism or harvey raj, one of the leading world's leading epidemiologists at yalone oferom and they have a list a of 199ste studies that show that ivermectin is, on average about 85% effective against against serious disease and death. >> and for 400 studies that show that. same about hydroxychloroquine. yeah, i go and 400t it. >> break. we'll come back more of our exclusive town hall. robert kennedy juniotr for the hour, by the way. programing note live shows audienceabreak. rose tomorrow,co thursday night, right in new york city. just go tows hannity .com and tickets are free. things are just getting started all havingnew yorknnity.co a goe new york. all right. we'll continuee free to the day
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and friends wake up with steve to l may
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help you decide on the best treatment visit. no one missed talk. >> learn more. there we go. we've got thousands of people in here. i can't believe you all came. thank you all for coming. usands iwelcome back to hannity. we continue now with democraticn presidential candidateity.ke robert jr. >> i want to go back and thi.s i haes me nuts because i've
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been making the case that our current president, i don't think he knows today's tuesday. he could not sit with me as youo are and have this conversation. >> in my vie w. i think he is physically weak and a mess and nobody wants to say it except the few of us. >> i want you to look at this tape and tell if you think he's fit for the job. >> take a look. let's go. let him. look, the world for richer. for muslim athletes like kareem al-jubouri and. and joan bushing, gang member nasser changa co koala ban- on transistor americans. >> transgender america. mr. president. thank you. thank you. thank you much. appreciate that. thank you. thank you. than>> thak you. don't go anywhere. it's a very exciting day around heren't go a. a rea >> we'll have reaction. i met loan with him, just he andcte been a i and a simults interpreter. 68 times. m68 hours, 68 time, more than
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16 hours. all right. god save8 hour the queen man. thank you very much, mr. president. we really appreciate it. and we love you. thane itk you. i might add, if i didn't, i'd be sleeping alone. that's explaining to explain some long, long time. my wife's a philly girl. >> all right, where we going? but we're going to win and we're going to help. we have plans to build a railroad from the pacificto all the way across the indian ocean. >> by the way, i met build withe who. those guys that fly over shortly. i heard i'm having. okay. do you believe that he is physically, mentally cognitively strong enough to lead our country?
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this world is a dangerous place. robert kennedy jr.? >> robert kennedy jr. you know that this is r.as pl dangerous place. >> is he cognitively strong enough to be your president? pi >> well, he's never been verdey s, you know.rd all right. ou get you get an a-plus for that a answer. is hn a+e is he up to the job?jo i first of all, let me ask, how many of you here think he is not up to the job? >> let me hear now, i know thata there's a reluctanceus from politicians in your you're you're a democratic party guy. you said that at the censorship hearing where they censorea d. you and you devoted your life to things you believe in. and it's probably hardate yo for you to say that. >> but do you really think he's up to the job? no, buin.t i wouldn't i'm not reluctant to say that for partisan reasons.
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you know, i'm an okay what i've tried to do during this campaign is avoid attackse tr on people. all right. i will say i won't say whether he's up to it or not, whether he's making his own decision. the decisions that are coming out of the white house are badeh decisiones. right. and, you know, the i mean, the democratic party does not censor people, in my experience. we're in me not the party of wa. we're not the party of the neocons dictating foreign policy. we're the party of the middle class. and we're the party of workingpe people. and that's not where the party is. i would tell you, here would be my agenda. >> and i think you agree on some of these things. i want to secure our borders.de. i believe every american has the right to be safe and secure in their town and their city. >> that means we have to have law and order. it's a prerequisite to pursue happiness. i want an economy that is thriving, an opportunity economy where everybody, regardless, and op where you stn
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life, can climb that ladder to success. i wantat ladder to a mean, toug kill of military that would serve as a deterrent to any ill ile regime that might have ill intentions towards us. i believe in peace through, engh strength with all my heart. >> control our borders. all these things. there simply. i believe that education or school choic ooe, we agree on these things. >> yeah, we agree on all those things. no. . one area i don't like the fact't america is bearing the brunt and the burden of financike. most of the war against putin and ukraine. i think we agree on thatwar aga why isn't europe? why don't they ever step up and their own continent before they ask for u.s. involvemennenm and why would joe biden veto poland given zelenskyyene biden fighter jets to actually fight to win the war after they were invaded? >> well, the more disturbing thinded?g is that on two occasis
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the russians tried to sign a peace agreement with.ac >> zelenskyy you trust putin who i trust? but no, but that's i don't listen, i, i, i've litigated o over 500 lawsuit, all of themve en d up with or many of them end up with settlements. i want to go the other. and he never trust the guy on the other side whos wite language are you use the design of agreements or ukraine to appease putin. putin rather i think is evil. they've already given up crimea. it was annexed to what they now they havne toe to give up the de by this area. >> you know ukraine because of are pushing the ukrainp e into the war on two occasions letting them in. >> we must agree to it. let me let me let me answer your question. in 2019, france, germany inand russia agreed to the minsk accords that years zelenskyy
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ran for president. he was a comedian. no political experience. why did he win? because he he won. ran on one issue signingg the the minsk accords. as soon as he got in there. victory. mis. n asnew and the white house told him he couldn't do it. then putin sends 40,000 troops and that's not enough to get the country. clearly, he wanted us to come to negotiate. he wanted somebody to come to the negotiating table. zelenskyy came to the negotiating table, signed a newi agreement that was the minsk accordats to in 2022, and thatrn would have allowed donbat sllowd to stay and lugansk the state to remain as par -t ukraine. we set putin's mind it. zelenskyy initially, and putin ,good faith, began withdrawing troops from the ukraine. what happened? we sent boris johnson over there to torpedo i the ukrait be don't want peace with we want war with russia.
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know what? and why are you blaming's america's role in this? and look, i am putin, to me, is an evil murdering. and when he leaves this earth, nobody's going to miss him. let's be honesthugt. >> however, i think that europe has a responsibility to protect their continent, and yet it always seems to fall in rthe united states.fa joe biden has committed all these billions of dollarllsn sthese that we can't afford, and he'sdo not fighting the war to win the war. if y noti don't believe in fighg wars half assed. if you're going to fight a war, you go in overwhelming force. you beat them. thatgetht the . >> that's it. and only if it's provoked. putily if itn did not need to ie a sovereign country. and my view is perfect. >> nope, i don't think he is either. i agree with you on that pary.t' but america's role, i think, shoulds ated be dictated first by europe. >> and they've got to defend their continent and they haven't stepped up in my view. >> no, i mean, i don't think most of the european countries
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wanted the war either way. it's clear what happened, which is that, you know, from in beginning, we promised 1992, the russian leadership said we will move as well as gorbachev said when when, when the soviet union, he was getting ready to dismantle the soviet union. and henion, he ady to d said we're going to allow you we're going to withdraw 400,000 troops fromo europe, from east germany, and we're goinm g to allow you to reunite germany under nato's hostile army. i see concession for that one commitment. we want what the russian ws is that you will not move nato to the east. james baker, who is undersecretary of state under bush ker, sec, famously promised we will not move nato one inch to the east. well, since then we've in 1000 miles and 14 countries now, wei. started that plan in 1997. bill perry, who was the secretary of defense under clinton, said to the clinton administration, if you mov1997,e
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nader the eas, i'm resigning because you are forcing the russians to come to war with us. george kennan was the most important diplomat in american history, the architect of the containment policy during world war two.he so the same thing. you do not nee said thid to man enemy out of russia. >> russia should be treated the way we won the cold war. it get tres. let me ask you a question. china has been showing nothing but hostility covered intellectual property thefbut, unfair trade practices. >> they've been confronting our navy shipsunthey in internal waterways. >> they've been confronting our fighter jets, international airways. >> they had the spy drone go to fly all around the country, and joe didn't shoot it down. >> they threatened to shoot hypersonicound the. sonic missit the u.s.. they're threatening to take out taiwan and take over taiwa n. u >> they call it reunification. if you president would.s, you come to the defense of taiwan, our our. >> no, no president, nopresid presidential candidate with any prudenceen would answer that
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question. >> our our, our, our ouruse] policy, our policy towards taiwan is strategic ambiguity. and that makes a lot of sense.sa you don't want to project your enemy what you're going to do in a certain case or embolden your will go to war thinking that you're going to support them. so that's been our policy and it's as you see china as our top geopolitical foe, they're also trying to undermine the u.s. dollar. >> you do? yeah. and that's why i didn't want that's another reason why the war in ukraine is insane because we have pushed china into the street. donald trump said he can resolve the issue. >> could you do you think you can create a peace agreement between ukraine, si russia? i think we have to. there's no joint russia's not going to lose this war not goi a can't afford. this would be like us losing a to mexico. they're not they are not going m
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to lose the waexicr. >> oh, look at what russia didn't stalingrad in order to preserv e its territorial integrity. russia has been invaded three times through you. russia's been n invaded three times through the ukraine. >> the last time hitler killed one out of every seven russians. they're 400 miles from moscow. we already have ages missileil systems within 12 minutes of moscow. we wouldn't tolerate that if the russians in 1962, when they put them in and do what my uncle was going to invade, if i they if they. >> i want to talk a little bit about your background growing up, your uncle as president of what to him, what happened to your dad? he was the attorney general and. what you think about how what how those things happened more with robert f kennedy jr. >> f hannity continues please don't. from i i was toldnn my small business
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one choice of online sellers go to ship station .co m, try and get two months free or are back in new york city. our exclusive town hall with democratic presidential primary candidate robert f kennedy jr. who shocked manyy, our e biden loyalists recently with stronger than expected poll numbers. who sho
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>> poll numbers have been very solid, strong, hovering around 20%. look, i know you've addressed it. i don't want i know y to belabor it, but i do want to bring it up because i think there's some ambiguity on it. and this was the comment on tape, there is a tape of it. >> i can play it if you want, gt that there is an argument that colbert was ethnic, ethnic t, targeting certain races disproportionately, targeting, for example, caucasian and black people. >> and ther people who are most immune are ashkenazi and chinese. and then you said at another an that's not what youe were saying. >> was it just misunderstood? sasi, i don't like people that race to say that somebody is anti-semitic or racist when in fact, i just want to clarify . i was i was describing an nira. h funded study. >> first of all, it's not surprising that a disease would target would have
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a disproportionate impact on certain races. many disease and this is a and oi was just describing a 2021 study that was funded by nih. i watudys performed by a half a dozen. he signed his three three lead scientist from cleveland clinic . and that study showed that the the docking site and, the on the front cleave of the of the covid virus was particularly compatible with certain races. and itvirus was doesn't mean the races disproportionately died chiefly with african people of african descent right next of caucasians, least of all people from finlandople fro and peopled certain german germanic races and chinese were were also
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the least least or less susceptible ashkenazi. all right. there was no suggestion ever that somebody designed it to be. that way, that it was designed to preserve certain races. >> i was not suggesting that. so let me as k you about your life. >> i look at your life. your uncle is the president ofri the united states, camelot. >> we all know so much about the presidency of your uncle, the short presidencyt the, le your uncle and your father, the attorney general ate the time. and then your father makes a run for president. and like his brother, he was assassinated. for presyou have suggested that you believe there was a conspiracy y within our government intelligence agencies, more specifically, you mentioned the cia and that you even believe yourself today because of your last name. >> i'm assuming that your lifein could be in jeopardy. why do you believe they were
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involved in the assassination of both your father, your dad and your uncle? and maybe that you may be yourn target? oh, i haven't said that. i may be a target. people have asked me. >> i mean, there's always for a anybody who runs fornybody pres, anybody who does on on fox is a target. >> but go ahead. oh, you know, i think i've taken a lot worse risks ining fo my life and running for president. so i'm but but it's also got to be hard. >> you lost your uncle. you lost your father. i mean, that's horrible. >> yeah, but what are you saying? are you know, so why d your unco you think that our government could be involved in? >> oh, well, it wasn'ternmentcon the warren commission, obviously, which was run allen dulles, who was the head of the cia, who my uncle fired, that it was a lone shooter, which was lee harvey oswal, fod oh, when congress a congressional committee reinvestigated between 1977
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and 1979, the house select assassinations committee ,they concluded and they saw a lot more documentation and had a lot more witnesses. and the warren commission never ansaw it, concluded that my unc was killed by a conspiracy. and most of the people, for example, schweitzer, who isd the first head of the committee ,publicly said jfk, john and, j, the president, united states was cia was involved in the murder opresidenf the presi united states. and that's a quotation most of the people on that committee at that time believe that it was the cia. >> it was believed certain people in the cia were seven at the time seven or eight, i was i was ten when my uncle was killed. >> i was t when my father was killed. so, you know, and today there is overwhelming evidence. i mean, in fact, one of the reasons to release all of the files on it and let let be transparent, let us see the america you're not
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some good person. you're still, you know. the law requires there there is a law requires that all of the records of john kennedy's assassins and agent be releasedk to the publienc ten years ago. so they're still holding 5000 documents. president biden promised when he was elected that he was going to release those documents. president trump promisedto, that he would. but the cia doesn't want themqui to. and so the question that i think americans have a right to ask, includinonricans h g members, you know, my father and uncle's family is why not? what is it that you don't want to see 60 years later? >> and by the way, wow, it you know, the white house last drawn the last tranche of documents released on had documentation in there that finally got even the new york timeed had dfinally s mad at led was at cia asset and he washe
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working for the cia. so and i mean if the warren commission had known thatknown back in, you know, 196th0 four,h they have had a very different time and the house assassinations committee never knew that that was released. you know, we've known thatav we've had documentation that known that at least a decadeat, but some of that documentation became overwhelming. and this last tranche and finally the mainstream media acknowledged that, yeah, he had this relationship with the cia going back to 1957 or 1958. >> we have t a minute left in this hour. and i want to ask you this. you you're talking to the american people tonight. why should. they vote for you for president? tell them, make me in a one minute. >> final statement. i'm mean, you know, i'm running on a i'm i think most americans were at each other's throats today.
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we have the worst polarization that we've ever had since h the american civil war. it's more dangerous and more toxic. so is it a little crazady? >> i mean, six years ago when my father ran, it was you know, there was a lot of division at that time. it's hard to see this ever going to end well. and what i hav e said is i want to end that polarization. and i want to do that end that p, you know, and then that's the way that we're going to do that. the first thing we have to do is to tell the truth, haveh. somebody have a president who's willing to tell the truth about everything. evil people in this country know that the system is rigged and they know thatsystem i they're being lied to. >> and we look at donald trump and all like, look, look at, for example, the way hillary clinton, top secret classified information. no, nok at prosecutor would ever
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prosecute, no rated chappaqua, you got four locations. >> joe biden has top secret classified information . they didn't raid his home. donald trump, they raid mar-a-lago and thenn the question is, in the 2020 election, for example, the fbiti had hunter's laptop in december of 2019, they verified its authenticity in march of 2020.ci why was the fbi in the months leading up to that elections th meeting with big tech companies and telling big tech companies that they may be victims of misinformation campaigns and it may be about joe or hunter biden when? they knew well they'd already authenticated it and what'sis te interesting is the head of site integrity for twitter at the time you'll. >> rat hy at theh actually testn a missouri case that in fact that said it might be about hunter and then none of these big tech companies allowed anybody to read the laptop story in the weeks leadingptop to that election. >> now, to me, that is ourt el government, in this case,throug
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through the fbi, putting cinder blocks on a scale of an is that something you would stop and do you agree with me? >> yeais that soh i would stop.e in fact, i'm going to issue an? executive order the moment i get into the white house, the first day forbidding that ending the weaponization ofatio our agencies for of political purposes. and it's it's worse it's ever been, in my view, it's worse than it's ever been. >> and you one party will be in power and then they'll start doing it to the other party. >> and of course, back and forth laws, of course. and as you know, judge dougherty's decision, which i'm my name is, you know,, it a curse on many, many, many pages, that because i was the first person censured by the biden white house, the biden administration, not president biden, took the oath ofbiwhite ho office on january , 2021. >> and the white ordered twitter to begin censoring me
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37 hours later. i was the first name to be censored, and three weeks after that, my instagram account, which was my major way of talking to the public, was de-platforming disappeared. oh, by the way, did you see it? the censorship hearing you got. a great line when you said, i'm at a censorship hearing and you're censoring>> sea. >> i mean, i thought that was pretty funny . when we come back, more of our town hall with robert f kennedy jr. pleasey y. stay with us. >> good morning. the collapse. >> good, good, good morning. yeah. tripod collects chewy fruit bites for fast and gentle constipation relief in as little as 30 minutes, making your good morning even better with galaxy pro pros. it's my job. make sure you're prepared. anything and i mean anything. yep. yep. you? yep. it's go time.
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cries out to us. l and >> comfort, comfort my people. we're inth a race against time to reach every holocaust to reach every holocaust survivor former soviet union. many are poor and hungry, naro and they have nowhere to turj n >> some personal appeal. it's not my call now hungry . dt marriage has had such a hard life from the day that she wasfe born into the holocaust, we were so hungry that we would go my mother and find the leaves and grass and we would pick the >> still today, she's suffering with no there to help her.od box with no there to help her.od box dare we turn t our back on her now for $25? now for $25? you can rush a food box to a holocaust survivor or an elderld food y. and co >> the international fellowship of christianmfyears. s and brinm urgently needed food and comfort in their final
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lease on lifdse. golo is the only thing that will let you lose weight and keeptays off it off.c) and keeptays off it off.c) >> who loses £138 in nine months? i di >> it was a lifestyle change and you make the change and it stays off. >> charlie shimkus brings you cooking with friends from easy appetizers to mouthwatering desserts, simple and delicious. >> from york box favorites. you get to have a little slice of them in your own kitchen. cooking with friends by carley shimkus. preorder today at fox news books .com when you can't watch listen get the latest news business and news headlines on sirius xm. any time anywhere fox news radio on sirius xm america is listening. >> unfortunately that is all the time we have left this evening. robert f kennedy jr. thank you so much for doing this. we appreciate it for ro this video. thanks to everyone who participated in tonight's town hall. par we have in-studio showtistown h tomorrow and thursdaaly night.
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sign up. hannity rt.com tickets are absolutely free. please. your dvr so you never, ever, ever, ever miss an episode of hannity. never miss ae let notnot yo your heart be trouble. greg gutfeld standinurrt be trgm >> put a smile on your faceil and take you to bed. have a great night. >> and still we're still feeling the profound loss of a pandemic, as i mentioned, of over 100 people dead through it, it was over 100.was over >> mr. president. all right. verybo happy tuesday, everybody. dy